Product Details
Hell to Pay

Hell to Pay
By Simon R. Green

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #53819 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-12-26
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 272 pages

Customer Reviews

Take a trip to the Nightside 5
Pre-ordered as soon as it was announced and read it in January.

Well I finished and now I have to wait until January for book 8, but hey at least there's going to be a book 8 to wait for, so that makes me happy.

I really enjoyed this trip to the nightside. John spends most of the book without his sidekicks though Dead Boy makes a small but welcome appearance. (I like Dead Boy)

John is on a typical PI case - find the missing girl - except in the Nightside nothing is typical. For one thing, she's immortal! John takes us on a journey interviewing relatives, wise-cracking, meeting the weird and wonderful Nightsiders, taking care of business, and generally putting the wind up anyone who gets in his way.

I thought the cover was a little misleading as that kinda looked a bit like Lilith and I wondered if she had returned. The books still have that hard-boiled, noir detective feel, with a supernatural twist. John is doing his thing even after the Lilith War, some of the Nightsiders are rebuilding. Walker makes an appearance also, and still seems to be in charge and powerful. Some hints perhaps that he will feature in the next book and we might find out exactly who is behind him now that the authorities are dead and gone.

We are currently on book one of this series with our Book Group and will be continuing all the way through because it is such a hugely entertaining series. I don't want to give anything else away from this book and spoil it for anyone, but put it on your TBR lists!

Surprisingly slight plot and lack of an emotional core3
I found the latest in the Nightside series to be something of a chore and the reason is an ironic one. In the previous books, I've been dying to have Green write more about his world and his ideas because I've been largely of the view that they needed to be expanded upon. In Hell To Pay however, I felt that because the story itself was too slight - essentially 'find the missing girl and collect reward' - there was too much padding whereby Green spends too much time focusing on the social structure and social dichotomy of the Nightside's upper echelons and lowest scum.

Like I said, this is a 'find the girl' story and whilst the jacket blurb hints that this will be more of a straightforward gum-shoe operation, it's disappointing that Green still shoehorns in Taylor's gift when he needs to move the plot along. To find Griffin's granddaughter Melissa, Taylor has to look into the family history - a mysterious one involving a deal with the devil - and into the relationship between the family members. There are some interesting scenes that come up along the way - I particularly liked the Arcadian Project, which gives Taylor the perfect vision of his parents and I also liked the characters of Bruin Bear and Seagoat, who brought some much welcomed humour to the plot. I also think that Green does a good job at characterising both the distinct characters of the Griffin family members and how they have each been damaged by the power and wealth that the Griffin's deal brought them.

Green touches on the power struggles within the Nightside and hints at a future story arc in that Walker seems to have found himself some new Authorities substitutes to support his exercise of control. I'd have liked to see more about how the Nightside is rebuilding itself after it's near destruction by Lilith, but perhaps this is something that will be developed further in the future books.

The denouement to the plot is a little ho-hum despite Green's best attempts at subverting a very old cliche. In particular, it was very difficult for me to care about Melissa's fate because she doesn't appear in the book and when other characters talk about her, it's only to say how little they knew her. As a result, I felt that the ending lacked emotional tension and in particular, robbed the final sacrifice of the poingnancy it needed. Saying that, Green does have some emotional core via Polly's character, one who I would have liked to see more of on the page.

return to the nightside4
Seventh in simon r green's nightside series. These involve John Taylor, a private detective with psychic powers, who lives and works in the nightside. This is a part of london off the beaten tracks, a horror/fantasy world full of strange creatures and individuals.

The last three books in the series all formed part of an ongoing storyline, but that finished in book six and this one pretty much stands alone, so would be easily accessible to new readers. John is hired by the griffin, an immortal man who wants to take control of the nightside, to find his niece, who has gone missing. He proceeds to investigate the situation, and tours the nightside dealing with strange places and people on the way, and finding a few more things than he bargained for about his client in the process.

A short book of no more than 270 pages, told in the first person, with very readable prose. If you like a good bit of readable fantasy that's not a tolkein clone, then this will appeal. It's a little disappointing that one regular character is off stage till the last chapter, but that probably suits the needs of the story fine. Another entertaining entry in an entertaining series